Methylation-related Epigenetic Signals in Bacterial DNA
Abstract
In prokaryotes, the most common DNA modification is methylation: For instance, DNAs from enteric bacteria contain minor amounts of 6-methyladenine and 5-methylcytosine (Marinus 1987). Base modifications are formed by two classes of methylases: (1) those associated with restriction/modification systems (Bickle and Krüger 1993) and (2) two methyltransferases that do not have a restriction enzyme counterpart: the Dam methylase (DNA adenine methyltransferase) and the Dcm methylase (DNA cytosine methyltransferase). Both enzymes transfer a methyl group from S-adenosylmethionine to a base located in specific, double-stranded DNA sequences (Noyer-Weidner and Trautner 1993). The target for Dam methylase is 5′-GATC-3′ (Lacks and Greenberg 1977; Hattman et al. 1978). The Dcm enzyme methylates the inner cytosine of the pentanucleotides 5′-CCAGG-3′ and 5′-CCTGG-3′ (May and Hattman 1975).
While the biological role of the Dcm enzyme remains largely unknown (Marinus 1987; Noyer-Weidner and Trautner 1993; Gläsner et al. 1995), Dam methyltransferase is known to participate in the control of many cellular processes: DNA replication, chromosome segregation, mismatch repair, and transcriptional regulation of certain genes (for reviews, see Marinus 1987; Messer and Noyer-Weidner 1988; Barras and Marinus 1989; Noyer-Weidner and Trautner 1993).
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.141-153